Saturday, April 16, 2016

1903 - The Bucs started the season off right, defeating the Reds 7-1 behind a Deacon Phillippe two hitter. Playing before 12‚000 fans at Cincinnati’s Palace of the Fans, it was the first of four straight wins over Cincy to open the season that would eventually take them to the first World Series against the Boston Americans.

1903 - Pirate Hall-of-Fame OF Paul "Big Poison" Waner was born in Harrah, Oklahoma. He had a 20 year big league career, with the first 15 spent in Pittsburgh. As a Pirate, Waner compiled a line of .340/.407/.490 as one of the greats to don a Bucco uniform.

Paul Waner 1925 Diamond Stars

1912 - The Bucs booked the rare 5-3-7 DP at Redland Field, with LF Max Carey sneaking behind second base to finish the twin killing. The Pirates took an 8-2 decision for their first victory of the year while handing Cincy its first loss.

1929 - The Cubs drew their largest Opening Day crowd to date, estimated at 46,000, but lost to the Buccos 4-3 at Wrigley Field. Burleigh Grimes went the distance for the win, while Pie Traynor banged out three hits and scored twice.

1935 - The Reds lobbied to have their home opener moved up to today, and the league office agreed. In a classic case of being careful what you wish for, Pittsburgh clocked Cincinnati 12-6 in front of 27,400 at Crosley Field. Sam Byrd homered for the Bucs and Waite Hoyt picked up the win. The game was played on a cold, raw day that the Pittsburgh Press said was “...better suited for football than baseball.” The next day, the two teams travelled to Forbes Field in Pittsburgh where the original opener was scheduled, and the Reds had better luck, taking a 7-4 decision.

1937 - The Pirates traded 1B/RF Earl Browne to the Philadelphia Phillies in exchange for LHP Joe Bowman. Bowman worked five years for the Bucs with a 33-38/4.35 record, splitting his time between starting and the pen while Browne’s last big league season was 1938. Bowman swung a good stick, too, batting .281 for the Pirates as an often called-upon pinch hitter with 322 PA.

Joe Bowman 1940 Play Ball

1953 - The Pirates beat the Phils in a 14-12 barnburner on Opening Day at Forbes Field. The Phillies scored nine runs in the top of the fifth‚ and the Pirates came back with six in the bottom half to tie the NL record for runs in an inning at fifteen. They added five more in the sixth to pull away. It was a team effort; all nine members of Pittsburgh’s starting lineup had at least one hit. Cal Abrams led the pack with three knocks while Danny O’Connell had three RBI.

1962 - Roberto Clemente's three run homer in the fifth propelled the Bucs to a 6-5 win over Chicago at Wrigley Field, redeeming himself for a first inning error that allowed a run in. Diomedes Olivo got the win in relief of Bob Veale. Bill Virdon had three knocks, and Dick Groat, Dick Stuart and Don Hoak each chipped in a pair.

1985 - Jose DeLeon tied the Bucco record for most strikeouts thrown in a game by a right-handed pitcher as he whiffed 14 Mets at TRS. He gave up four hits without a run or walk in 8 innings of work. The Pirates went down 1-0, victims of a Ron Darling/Jesse Orosco one-hitter. Candy took the loss in relief.

Jose DeLeon 1985 Fleer

1996 - Orlando Merced and Jay Bell both hit grand slams at Busch Stadium to lead the Bucs to a 13-3 win over the Cards. Merced had three hits and five RBI while Zane Smith earned the W.

2015 - Francisco Liriano returned from paternity leave and tossed an eight K gem at PNC Park, but lost 1-0 to Alfredo Simon and the Detroit Tigers. Frankie gave up a solo homer to ex-Bucco Rajai Davis, and the Bucs could only manage two hits in the defeat.

Talk It Up

If you have any thoughts to share or an idea for a future post, we're all ears. Give us a shout atThe Green Weenie. And by all means, let your voice be heard and leave a comment. We enjoy the chatter.

One rule: if you want to leave a relevant link, or a link to your site, that's fine with us; the more the merrier. But if you're trying to sell stuff or are leaving flaming posts, we zap it, no questions asked.